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You, my old companion, I’ve junked three trucks and still I keep you. Buried five dogs. Raised three children who are now raising children. And still I wear you. You jingle when I walk. Nails clink in pouches. The drill in its holster slaps my leg. The hammer in its clip spanks my **** You bristle with screwdrivers, chisel, big fat pencil, needlenose plier. You call attention. Random kids who have never seen a tool belt before follow me around asking “What are you doing?” Then: “Can I help?” You smell like me (and I, like you). Leather, fourth decade. I’ve washed your pouches with saddle soap, sewn your seams with dental floss. Now the web of your belt is fraying, wrapped (silly, I know) with duct tape. Your pockets fill over time. Once in a while I remove every tool, every last ***** and nail. I hold you upside down and shake. Sawdust, a dead spider, little strippings of insulated wire will fall out. And once, my missing wedding ring. It had broken. I had taken it to a jeweler for repair, but when I got there I couldn’t find it. A year later, you coughed it up. When your webbing finally snaps, when you drop from my waist, maybe it’s you, old tool belt, I’ll take to the jeweler for remounting, for buff and polish. He’ll understand.
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Mar 30, 2017
Mar 30, 2017 at 8:23 PM UTC
Ode to a Leather Tool Belt
You, my old companion, I’ve junked three trucks and still I keep you. Buried five dogs. Raised three children who are now raising children. And still I wear you. You jingle when I walk. Nails clink in pouches. The drill in its holster slaps my leg. The hammer in its clip spanks my **** You bristle with screwdrivers, chisel, big fat pencil, needlenose plier. You call attention. Random kids who have never seen a tool belt before follow me around asking “What are you doing?” Then: “Can I help?” You smell like me (and I, like you). Leather, fourth decade. I’ve washed your pouches with saddle soap, sewn your seams with dental floss. Now the web of your belt is fraying, wrapped (silly, I know) with duct tape. Your pockets fill over time. Once in a while I remove every tool, every last ***** and nail. I hold you upside down and shake. Sawdust, a dead spider, little strippings of insulated wire will fall out. And once, my missing wedding ring. It had broken. I had taken it to a jeweler for repair, but when I got there I couldn’t find it. A year later, you coughed it up. When your webbing finally snaps, when you drop from my waist, maybe it’s you, old tool belt, I’ll take to the jeweler for remounting, for buff and polish. He’ll understand.
First published in Workers Write! April 2016
joe-cottonwood
Written by
Mar 30, 2017
Mar 30, 2017 at 8:23 PM UTC
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